An Audit Analysing The Standard Of Patient Care And Service Provision In Sppc At A Tertiary Hospital And Hospice

Title

An Audit Analysing The Standard Of Patient Care And Service Provision In Sppc At A Tertiary Hospital And Hospice

Creator

Durrant E; Warlow T; Coulson-Smith P; Renton K

Publisher

Archives of Disease in Childhood

Date

2023

Subject

child; female; human; male; palliative therapy; clinical article; Hospices; patient referral; conference abstract; place of death; hospice care; patient coding; staff training; tertiary care center; sample size; manager; patient care

Description

Objectives To identify gaps in SPPC provision at a patient and service level at the tertiary centre, local children's hospice and the region, compared to national frameworks and standards. Specialist paediatric palliative care (SPPC) aims to improve quality of life for children with life-limiting and life-threatening conditions. SPPC services were introduced at a tertiary hospital in 2012 and are in their infancy. As an underdeveloped speciality, there are gaps in provision across the region and little research has been carried out to identify them. Methods The last 15 children and young people (CYP) who died and were referred to tertiary SPPC services from the region were identified. Patient data were collected using hospital and hospice care databases and discussions with staff involved in patient care. Service provision data were collected by discussions with service managers. Results Only 80% of children and young people (CYP) had an Advance Care Plan (ACP). Of the CYP who required rapid transfer, none had a documented plan in an ACP. Preferred place of death was achieved in 67% of CYP. The average time from referral to SPPC to death was 38 days. Of the staff training standards, 80% were met at the tertiary centre and 91% at children's hospice. 73% of protocol standards were met by tertiary centre and 91% by the children's hospice. 56% of provision standards were met by tertiary centre and 69% by the children's hospice. 50% of the staffing standards were met at both services. Neither service met any of the data management and service improvement standards. Conclusion These data showed no major gaps in patient care standards, although improvement is needed to ensure all CYP have ACPs. Major gaps were identified in service improvement and data management in comparison to national standards. Providing a 24-hour SPPC service and improving data collection could address this. A limitation of this audit is the small sample size.

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Citation List Month

October List 2023

Collection

Citation

Durrant E; Warlow T; Coulson-Smith P; Renton K, “An Audit Analysing The Standard Of Patient Care And Service Provision In Sppc At A Tertiary Hospital And Hospice,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 27, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/19323.